On the Economics of Ecological Nuisance

On the Economics of Ecological Nuisance

April 30 2003

On the Economics of Ecological Nuisance

by

Anders Skonhoft*)

Department of Economics

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

N-7491 Trondheim, Norway

(

phone: +47 73533558, fax: +47 5996954)

and

Carl-Erik Schulz

Department of Economics and Management

University of Tromsø

N-9037 Tromsø, Norway

Abstract

The paper analyses the economics of pest and nuisance related to wild animals. We study stylised models where wild animals represent a direct nuisance for agricultural production through grazing and crop damages. These damages are particularly relevant in poor rural communities in third world countries where people are depending on livestock and crop production, and at the same time are living close to the nature and wildlife. The analysis includes both situations with only nuisance costs, and the case when the wildlife also can have a harvesting value. The emphasis is all the time on large mammals and the criteria for optimal species eradication are particularly analysed.

______

*)Corresponding author.

We appreciate comments from the participants at the Ulvøn conference, Sweden June 2000, and the Economics and Environmental conference at the Beijer Institute, Stockholm, September 2000. Thanks also for comments on earlier drafts from Geir Asheim and Karl-Gustaf Løfgren. Skonhoft thanks the Norwegian Research Foundation through the program ‘Biodiversity, Threats and Management’ and The European Commision through the program ‘BIOECON’ for financial support.

On the Economics of Ecological Nuisance

Abstract

The paper analyses the economics of pest and nuisance related to wild animals. We study stylised models where wild animals represent a direct nuisance for agricultural production through grazing and crop damages. These damages are particularly relevant in poor rural communities in third world countries where people are depending on livestock and crop production, and at the same time are living close to the nature and wildlife. The analysis includes both situations with only nuisance costs, and the case when the wildlife also can have a harvesting value. The emphasis is all the time on large mammals and the criteria for optimal species eradication are particularly analysed.

  1. Introduction

Wild species represent in most instances benefits for the humans. This is particularly so for various fish stocks which make up a large part of the diet of the world's population. The traditional way of analysing wild animals in an economic context is therefore to treat them as economic goods, and that utilisation through harvesting yields a net benefit. However, quite frequently we also find that wild animals represent a nuisance for people. This is often so in poor rural communities where people are depending on livestock and crop production, and where they at the same time are living close to wildlife and wild species. But also in developed countries wild mammals can frequently represent a nuisance. The agricultural damages takes place in a variety of ways. It includes eating crops and pastures, predation on livestock, rooting, tramping, pushing away obstructions such as fences, wallowing and acting as carriers of weeds, parasites and diseases (Hone 1994). Many local communities in African countries, as well as in other developing countries, therefore see large mammals basically as a nuisance (see, e.g., Kiss 1990 and Swanson and Barbier 1992, Swanson 1994)[1].

The root of most of these conflicts between humans and wild mammals lies in the direct competing uses of land, and expanding agriculture has all over the world depleted or exterminated wild species both to incorporate more land, and to secure agricultural benefits from damage of wild stocks (Kiss 1990). But the economics of ecological nuisance is not related only to terrestrial animal species and the competing uses of land. Marine species can also cause damages, not only benefits. As humans interact with marine species basically through harvesting (and pollution), however, the nuisance problem here will in most instances be of the indirect type where invaluable species (from a commercial point of view) prey upon, or compete with, valuable species (see, e.g., Flaaten and Stollery 1996). As already indicated, this kind of indirect impact can also be of some importance for terrestrial species as wildlife can predate upon livestock, and it can be grazing competition between livestock and wildlife. In terrestrial ecosystems species like wolves and other large predators will rarely be harvested for profit, but the stocks may be culled to keep the ecosystem in shape and allow for increased growth of other, valuable stocks (Wright 1999).

Most of the economics of pest control has been related to problems of controlling agricultural pests as insects, mites and weeds. See Carlson and Wetzenstein (1993) for a fairly recent overview. Only a small fraction of the papers reviewed here are studying vertebrate pest control problems with particular emphasis on mammals. However, there are some few works that fall within the domain of bio-economic analysis. Hone (1994) summarises a number of simple static pest control models, and presents some estimates of rodent damages as well as damages related to other mammals (cf. also footnote 1). Tisdell (1982) provides a very detailed study of the damages and control costs of feral pigs in an Australian context. The cost and benefit of feral pig, causing damages on Californian rangeland, is also studied in a recent paper by Zivin et al. (2000) within an optimal control framework. The management of elephants causing grazing damages, but at the same time also represents consumptive as well as non-consumptive values in an east-African context, is analysed within the same framework by Bulte and van Kooten (1998). Large mammals causing damages on agriculture production is also modelled by Schulz and Skonhoft (1996) and Skonhoft and Solstad(1998), but only as a side effect. The following analysis builds to some extent on Zivin et al. (2000), but the conditions for extermination or living with the nuisance are discussed in a more fundamental way. Hence, contrary to their analysis, the possibilities of extermination and not trapping at all are studied both by looking at the conditions when an internal optimal solution approaches the boundaries of zero and the carrying capacity, and by comparing the present-value profit of the programs of an interior solution with that of these boundary solutions. For some species extermination seems to be unrealistic - usually due to high costs. However, the threat of species extermination is not a theoretical one. This is a major concern for most of the conservationist NGO's - focussing on species extinction in general, and specifically on large mammals. There have even been established huge international institutions, like the CITES, to protect endangered species. The threat of extinction is an economic one, and this paper will focus on the economic conditions that makes extermination a preferred option for the manager.

In what follows, we will study various situations of nuisance effects and damages caused by wild animals. The analysis is, however, restricted to situations where terrestrial animals cause direct damages, and the emphasis is all the time on large mammals. The models to be analysed are highly stylised and a traditional bioeconomic modelling approach is used. This means, among others, that a lumped parameter model, i.e., many parameters are collapsed into some few, gives the natural growth of the animals. Simple time invariant damage cost functions and cost functions for reducing the pest and nuisance are introduced as well. In some instances the nuisance species can also represent a value in the form of, say, meat or trophies. A simple benefit function, related to the harvesting, is then introduced in the same straightforward manner. The real world is clearly more complex; there are often more than one crop per year, there are lag effects between trapping effort and mortality, selective harvesting and trapping can take place, and so forth. All these simplifications are introduced to carry out a comprehensive and fairly general analysis where the basic questions are how to define a nature stock as an ’economic nuisance’; to what extent it is economic reasonable to harvest from a nuisance stock; when is it optimal to exterminate the nuisance; and under which circumstances make it most economic sense to live with the nuisance without any trapping.

As already indicated, we will basically think of wildlife causing damages on agricultural production. The following models have therefore a profit function related to crop production, which is reduced by the presence of wild animals. In section two we first analyse the pure nuisance case with no benefits related to the wild species. In a next step, in section three, an income stream of the wildlife when harvested or cropped, is introduced. This case is first analysed without harvesting costs while we next add costs. All the time we are thinking that the management is taking place at the farm level, or village level, with no non-consumptive value of the species included.

2. No value of the wild species, only nuisance

2.1 The model

As Zivin et al. (2000) we consider a landowner operating a piece of land with A >0 as the crop profit, assumed to be fixed over time, in absence of damages. A population of wild animals X (measured in number of individuals, or biomass) at time t (the time notation is dropped) is eating up, or damaging the yield. The damage is given by N=N(X), with N(0) =0 and N/X = NX >0[2]. When normalising the damages to the crop profit (see, e.g., Carlson and Wetzstein 1993), the net agricultural profit reads

(1)

The costs of controlling the nuisance depend on the number of trapped animals, and the stock size. The cost function is formulated as

(2),

where h denotes the number of trapped animals. The cost is therefore assumed to be linear in the outtake, while the unit trapping cost c(X) >0 is non-increasing in the stock abundance as trapping becomes progressively more difficult as the animal population becomes small,

cX0. In addition we have cXX 0.

The population growth is given as

(3)

where the stock grows according to the density dependent natural growth function F(X). All the time we will think of the natural growth function as a logistic-type model with F(0) =F(K) =0, where K >0 is the carrying capacity, and FXX <0, and where FX is positive for a stock size below that of Xmsy, and negative when X >Xmsy.

When the species have no harvesting value, the management problem is to balance the crop benefit, decreasing in the size of the nuisance, with the control costs, increasing in the number of species removed, in an optimal way[3]. The optimisation problem is then to maximise the present-value net benefit

(4)

under the constraint (3), and where 0 is the rate of discount, i.e., the return on alternative capital assets.

We start by solving the model when assuming an interior solution. Extermination and living with nuisance in its starkest form, i.e., keeping the wildlife at its carrying capacity in the long term, is considered next.

2.2. Controlling the nuisance, but living with it

The current-value Hamiltonian of the above problem is H = A(1- N(X))- c(X)h + (F(X) – h), where  is the shadow price of the wild animals. When we have an interior solution, i.e., a positive stock size, and harvesting taking place at the steady-state, the first order conditions for maximum are

(5)

(6) .

Equation (5) is the maximum principle condition saying that harvesting should take place up to the point where the unit harvesting cost is equal to the shadow value of the animals, while equation (6) gives the portfolio balance equation. Equation (5) states clearly that, when only being a nuisance, the shadow price of the animals will be negative. Moreover, as the stock becomes smaller the shadow price should be even more negative due to increasing unit trapping costs.

When combining the first order conditions and using the natural growth function (3), we obtain the reduced form long-term equilibrium condition as

(7) .

Hence, when having an internal solution, this equation alone determines the steady-state equilibrium stock X*. In a next step, the number of animals trapped follows from equation (3) when dX/dt =0, h* =F(X*)[4].

It is obvious that an optimal managed stock never will be larger if there is a nuisance effect linked to it than without the effect; wild animals without value will be left uncontrolled if they have no negative influence on crop production. When controlled, however, equation (7) states that the opportunity cost of capital should be equal to the marginal natural growth plus the marginal stock effects. Two marginal stock effects are present, the cost effect cXF(X*) and the marginal damage effect ANX (X*). The cost effect depends on the marginal unit control term cX and if its absolute value is large, it is optimal to have a small number of animals, ( - FX(X*)) <0. This holds because the trapping costs are non-increasing in the stock size while the damage costs are increasing in the number of animals.

By introducing shift factors for the cost and damage functions and taking the total differential of equation (7), it can be confirmed that more nuisance means a smaller stock while higher harvesting costs mean more animals. These effects may seem to contrast the above condition for a small steady-state stock when the marginal control effect dominates the marginal nuisance effect, i.e., ( - FX(X*)) <0. However, the marginal trapping cost can only be large for a small stock size. We also have that a more valuable crop means a smaller stock size, X*/A <0. The effect of the rate of discount differs from what is found in the standard harvesting model (see, e.g., Clark 1990) as we obtain X*/ >0. The reason is that there is no direct benefit from harvesting in the present model. Indeed, the situation is of the opposite, as effort must be used to keep the stock small, and the opportunity cost for this effort increases with a higher rate of discount.

The solution (7) can be illustrated by using the standard Gordon-Schäfer approach. The natural growth function is then F(X) = rX(1 – X/K) where K, as already mentioned, is the carrying capacity while r >0 is the maximum specific growth rate. In addition, we have the unit trapping cost function as c(X) = a/X with a >0. When assuming a linear damage function N(X) =X with  >0, and the model has the same functional specifications as Zivin et al.(2000), the steady-state stock size yields[5]. Using these specific functional forms there must be restrictions on the damage cost coefficient  together with the value of the crop A to obtain an interior solution. The unit trapping cost a can neither be too small or too large; if it is large it is optimal too keep the species uncontrolled, if it is small it is optimal to exterminate the nuisance stock. In addition, it is seen that X* approaches zero when the rate of discount approaches zero[6]. Extermination can therefore also be an option as well as keeping the nuisance at its carrying capacity. We now analyse these boundary solutions more closely.

2.3. Extermination of the nuisance or leaving it unexploited

Clark (1990, Ch. 2.8) analyses the economic and ecological conditions leading to extinction in the standard harvesting model. Using a purely compensatory natural growth function (as here), he first states that in the standard Gordon-Schaefer approach extinction is ruled out due to the infinite unit harvesting costs of extermination. However, as also Clark comments, this is unrealistic for many terrestrial species. This makes the pure Gordon-Schaefer approach unrealistic for studies where extermination is an economic option. Clark finds that extinction is optimal if the harvesting price is lower than the (constant) unit harvesting cost when the stock size is close to zero and if the rate of discount is substantial higher (two times) than that of the maximum specific growth rate of the species. His study concentrates on a nature asset stock – which will be left unexploited for a negative harvesting profit. Our case is opposite. We study a nuisance species, and the stock is a liability to the owner. The above analysis demonstrates, among others, that a valuable crop and large damages together with low trapping costs can make extinction an optimal policy. The same happens when there is no discounting and the damage function is linear.

These results become apparent when studying the conditions for approaching X* =0 when initially assuming a positive stock at the steady-state. To find the more precise conditions for extinction being an optimal policy, however, the present-value of the various programs have to be compared. Hence, the possibility for extinction can be viewed from two different angles; the one of looking at the conditions for X* approaching zero when initially having 0 <X* <K, and the one of comparing the present-value profit of driving the species to extinction with that of keeping a positive stock size. The last evaluation method dominates the first one. Accordingly, when equation (7) yields a positive stock, it is no guarantee that this represents the overall optimal solution.

The policy of not living with the nuisance at all and make the species extinct is optimal if the net discounted profit from doing so exceeds the net discounted profit from the internal optimal solution. When neglecting the extinction time and hence, assuming that extermination takes place immediately, the present-value profit of having no species left is PV**= 0[A(1–N(0))]e-tdt – E(X0) = A/– E(X0) where E(X0) denotes the extermination cost function, depending on the initial stock size X0. On the other hand, when having an internal solution, the present-value profit reads PV* = 0[A(1–N(X*)) – c(X*)F(X*)]e-tdt – E(X0,X*) =(1/[A(1–N(X*)) – c(X*)F(X*)]- E(X0,X*) when again adding the cost function of reaching the optimal stock size, depending on the location as the initial stock size as well as the steady-state. It is assumed that X* <X0, and again that the steady-state is approached immediately[7],[8]. The difference reads PV**- PV*(1/[AN(X*) + c(X*)F(X*)]+ E(X0,X*) - E(X0). When assuming that the steady-states are approached immediately, extermination is therefore always the optimal policy as long as the cost of reaching X* is larger than the cost of extermination. However, even if E(X0) dominates E(X0,X*) extermination is always optimal for finite extermination costs if the net discounted value of the costs of the nuisance stock (1/[AN(X*) + c(X*)F(X*)] is large. Hence, under these conditions, equation (7) with X* >0, does not represent the overall optimal solution. This is a far more general conclusion than Zivin et al.(2000).